Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
What is this?
Less
More

Memberships

Bee Skool

32 members • Free

Gardeners Growing Together

268 members • Free

Travel Trainers

171 members • Free

108 contributions to Travel Trainers
2026 travel prediction
Travel in 2026 will be defined by ultra-personalization and a focus on unique, individual experiences, often powered by AI-driven planning tools. Key trends include sustainable travel practices, wellness-focused trips, travel inspired by pop culture, and the continued blending of technology and human connection, with some predicting more animal-friendly amenities and tech-first accommodations. The gap between budget and premium travel experiences is also expected to widen, according to the The Points Guy. I'm stick with premium travel marketing. What's ur guess?
2026 travel prediction
1 like • 16h
@Lary Neron makes great sense. I generally start by asking clients to create a 3-part list. Each person individually, and ask them not to compare notes, until after they are finished. I encourage them to take a day or longer, and ask them about a book or film they liked that was set in Italy, because they usually will jog their memory about a place/thing they wanted to see/do.
1 like • 15h
@Lary Neron u can find the link on my website. U can make a copy and change what u need and use it yourself. The link is on my about page. About half way down the page a button called, Your Private travel assessment. (Something like that) https://travelhappy2.com/about/ It'll take u to my Google drive. Simply make a copy. Then u can edit it to make it your own. I only sell Italy so it gives examples of places in Italy.
Free commissions keep rolling in... Here's How:
This just in from Viator. - I promote my agent link on blogs, and get free biz. This tour sold to 8 people this past summer. I never promoted this "exact" tour, but I do promote many in Italy. I create blog posts and add my agent link to viator for direct booking. I'll be writing a post soon on this tour. I've been credited with 81 sales this year - so far. (I already have 6 for 2026). I count a sale as a single purchase, usually for 2, 4, or 5 tickets. The avg ticket cost is $110 - $300 USD for any experience I promote. I go for the higher ticket items. commissions are generally 10%. THIS particular experience, which Viator sent this accolade regarding, is over $200 pp. https://www.viator.com/tours/Bologna/Italian-Food-Experience-in-Bologna-Parmigiano-Reggiano-Factory-Visit-Wine-and-Vinegar-Tasting-and-Lunch/d791-7174P1
Free commissions keep rolling in... Here's How:
1 like • 6d
@Christine Berencz now that something to tell to the BDM!
0 likes • 2d
Wow! Talk about Grace! Let's pay it forward.
When you have really long layovers
I found this & thought it was interesting. Not that I would plan layovers as I usually try and get direct flights. What are your thoughts?
When you have really long layovers
1 like • 6d
I have actually planned for long layovers. In cities that could be interesting. To get out and take a look around. Toronto and Paris and Midland Odessa Texas. Those are three that I've actually planned for really long layovers. And I left my luggage at the airport while grabbing a taxi and spending hours looking at the city taking in a museum etc. Believe it or not really fascinating oil museum in Midland Odessa Texas not far from the airport maybe 40 minutes. Very impressive. But if it's a 2-hour layover I just sit at the bar.
1 like • 5d
Every airport I've been to has a luggage hold area, few are free. And now most airlines will not allow u to check luggage until 2 hours b4 flight, or 3 hrs b4 intl. It's best for airports that are really close to action, like Gatwick, Milan, Midway in Chicago, Dallas Love Field, LaGuardia, Tampa, fort Lauderdale, and many others. Too many airports are very far from downtown. Like Rome, O'Hare, DFW, London, Dallas, Cincinnati airport is actually in Kentucky. Well you get the idea. So sometimes I intentionally book first flight out to a layover when you have to do a layover, and then last flight out from there. Coincidentally those are usually the less expensive flights as well. Especially good if you got friends in those cities that you can hang out with for the day.
Your year Wrapped
It’s always great marketing to share with your audience who you really are… even if it’s chaotic. 😅 Use this prompt, and then post your chat gpt answer below. I’ll go first. “Make me a ChatGPT Wrapped for the past year: Summarize the year for me in Spotify Wrapped style, including the number of messages I sent, the topics I used the most, funny highlights, fun statistics (like the words I use the most), top 5 topics or conversations, and a description of my user style. Present it all in a fun, colorful, and humorous way.”
1 like • 6d
Okay so now I'm getting email from chat GPT telling me or asking me to use it. I asked the question yesterday by using your prompt for my year in review which revealed nothing. Because I really didn't use it much at all. So now they're sending me emails inviting me to use it. I guess have to figure a way to unsubscribe from these. Thank you very much. Lol lol lol
2 likes • 5d
@Michael Johnson 😆 😂 😂
Recording is up!
Here is the recording from our Talk Travel Tuesday today with @Lary Neron from AirLab. Please use this chat to pick Lary's brain about all things air, and remember to join his Skool Community for a deeper dive.
Recording is up!
1 like • 6d
Well that was a super interesting interview he really latest cards on the table. Fantastic The power of a niche. The way he talked about the airline industry seemed extremely similar to the media industry. In other words like buying advertising. In a newspaper or on TV is similar to buying a seat on an airline. Once the clock ticks the minute after the airline door is closed that seat can never be sold again and will remain empty. Same thing for a newspaper printed or a television program being over you can never sell that ad space again. So there is great fortunes to be made in buying remnant space in advertising. Makes me wonder if the airlines have anything like that? Of course it would be basically last minute or up to 72 hours before air time or print time or gate closing time.
2 likes • 5d
@Christine Berencz yeah I guess sort of. But I will tell you that in my lifetime maybe less than 50% of the flight have been fully packed and maybe 20% of the flights had standby. And at least 50% of my flights had anywhere from 10 seats to almost all of them available. I used to fly every other Wednesday from New York to Chicago and sometimes there were only 10 of us on the flight. And if we were snowed in it was my hotel at the airport just sitting on the plane or sleeping on the plane for 4 hours or so.
1-10 of 108
Gio Yara
5
134points to level up
@gio-yara-4646
I'm a Dad, Ghostwriter, Author, Marketing Expert, Filmmaker, Gardener, Fixer, & Pluviophile. Also happy, successful, perspicacious, stable, cultured.

Active 10h ago
Joined Feb 27, 2025
INTJ
Sun City Center, Fl 33573
Powered by